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Japanese young kids / young generation like cute things. Its' always fascinated me. When i was a kid in the late 80s and early 90s, this was not so. In Japan , there are so many eclectic tastes. My youngest brother watches hetalia, and all the animes nowadays, but at the same time he is a black belt in Karate, an expert in Kendo, and listens to heavy metal music. Very eclectic tastes we have, i guess. lol.

back then it was space gundam to macross to Voltes V which dear to us filipinos anime changes over time as for me i hate moe anime too unreal for my taste anyway this in relations to history is so different and so far from the truth
 
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Katsuragi, from the anime "Senran Kagura."

That anime is a disaster. No actual plot or storyline with girls fondle each other boob

back then it was space gundam to macross to Voltes V which dear to us filipinos anime changes over time as for me i hate moe anime too unreal for my taste anyway this in relations to history is so different and so far from the truth

It seem like you hate moe anime as much as I am. Moe anime can be entertainment sometimes but it should not be abused by Japanese mainstream and coming out every season. What type of anime do you prefer?
 
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The best animation movies are made by Hayao Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli. Disney and all the other US stuffs can't never scratch the surface of his movies in philosophical depth. He manages to syncretise all Eastern philosophies into one and yet, it appeals to all people, old and young, from all over the world.

Disney's movies are good guy vs. bad guy, black and white, no shades of grey, and at the end the good guy always wins, in essence all Hollywood flicks are constructed the same way. So obvious and so boring.
 
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That anime is a disaster. No actual plot or storyline with girls fondle each other boob

Well most anime are now like that: cute girls with flat chest or large chest and plots that doesn't make any sense, in fact, most anime today are like Playboy magazines except that these are animated and the females are drawn in paper.

This has something to do with the preferences of the current generation of anime fans in Japan, specifically those who grew up in 90s and now have a different expectations in their anime...such as preferring anime and manga with more female or all-female cast. There are also these "erotic visual-novel" games which kind of affect the preferences of some anime fans, preferring hand-drawn fictional girls and rejecting real women.

Maybe Nihonjin has more idea about this as I only read these things in some anime forums and Japanese pop-culture themed blogs and websites.
 
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KAO CORPORATION, a leading Japanese manufacturer of consumer products and chemical ingredients, has set a plan, which will run until 2018, to boost its business presence and manufacturing facilities in Asean, said Kazo Kozo Saito, president for consumer products in Asia, Americas and EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa).


He said that as part of the plan, Kao's headquarters in Japan would invest about 20 billion yen (Bt6.3 billion) each in Thailand and Indonesia to increase its manufacturing capacity as well as launching new production lines, such as for fabric care, sanitary napkins and baby products.

In Thailand, the company operates a manufacturing complex at Amata Nakorn Industrial Estate in Chon Buri province.

Thailand will be a centre for exporting consumer goods, such as skincare, hair-care, powdered and liquid laundry detergent, sanitary napkins and diapers, into neighbouring markets to cash in on the implementation of the Asean Economic Community next year.

In addition to Thailand, Kao Corp has manufacturing facilities for consumer goods in Indonesia and Vietnam.

The plant in Indonesia mainly supplies products to its domestic market, while the Vietnam facility exports skincare products back to Japan and some other markets.

"Under the plan to grow our business in Asean, we hope to increase the business contribution from ASEAN from currently 7 per cent to more than 10 per cent by 2018," Saito said. "We also want to grow our business in ASEAN by at least 10 per cent every year."

Saito said the company had invested about Bt600 million annually in its manufacturing complex in Amata Nakorn over the past three years, mainly to increase its capacity to respond to higher demand both in Thailand and neighbouring markets.

He said the company currently exported consumer products from Thailand to Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia, but expected to open new markets for export from here, especially the Middle East and South Asia, by 2018.

"To help facilitate our business in Thailand, we would like to urge Thailand's authorities to simplify their customs process as well as maintain investment privileges given to Japanese investors," Saito said.

He said Kao Corp last year achieved Bt13 billion in sales altogether from its two subsidiaries in Thailand, Kao Industrial (Thailand) and Kao Commercial (Thailand). About 70 per cent of sales were consumer goods, and the rest chemical ingredients.

Kao offers a variety of chemical products and services for industries such as ironing, electronics and agriculture, and raw materials for consumer products. The company is also a pioneer in the production of naphthalene sulphonate, which helps make concrete more solid. About 30 per cent of its chemical products are exported, to many countries including Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Myanmar, Australia and India.

Hiroyuki Kumazawa, president of the corporation's two Thai subsidiaries, said the company was looking into opening a new facility in Thailand, especially for goods such as sanitary napkins that have strong domestic demand.

"We want to increase the export contribution of our facility in Thailand from a very small base currently to about 10 per cent in the next two years, and up to 15 per cent by 2018," he said.

Kumazawa said the company expected sustainable annual growth of 6-7 per cent between now and 2018. However, if the plan to set up a new factory in Thailand is successful, annual growth is expected to be higher than 10 per cent.

"In my point of view, Thailand is still active in its domestic consumption despite the local political difficulty. The economic index [economy] is rebounding and in good shape in the second half of this year and the consumer-product market is expected to continuously expand."
 
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That anime is a disaster. No actual plot or storyline with girls fondle each other boob



It seem like you hate moe anime as much as I am. Moe anime can be entertainment sometimes but it should not be abused by Japanese mainstream and coming out every season. What type of anime do you prefer?

Some but a great majority is just too much anyway lets get back on topic FYI am mecha anime fan
 
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The best animation movies are made by Hayao Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli. Disney and all the other US stuffs can't never scratch the surface of his movies in philosophical depth. He manages to syncretise all Eastern philosophies into one and yet, it appeals to all people, old and young, from all over the world.

Disney's movies are good guy vs. bad guy, black and white, no shades of grey, and at the end the good guy always wins, in essence all Hollywood flicks are constructed the same way. So obvious and so boring.

Well said. The best of him " Sen & Chihito no Kamigakushi".

Always give me inspiration.
 
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Ambassador Aiboshi's Greeting

I am honored to assume the post of the Ambassador of Japan to ASEAN. This is the region that has been becoming more and more significant for Japan, and I feel a great responsibility upon receiving this critical duty. With the support from all of you, I would like to carry out the important task of being a representative of the Japanese Government to ASEAN.


From 2008 to 2011, I was posted to Vietnam for about three years. What is worthy of special mention is that, during the year 2010, Vietnam was the chair of ASEAN and a series of meetings and activities related to ASEAN were held throughout Vietnam. It was also the time that the preparations for official establishment of the Japanese Mission to ASEAN were being proceeded. Four years has passed since then, and I am filled with deep emotion that I myself have assumed the post of the Ambassador of Japan to ASEAN.


In 1977, the First ASEAN-Japan Summit Meeting was held and Japan announced the Fukuda Doctrine that aimed at “heart-to-heart” understanding and equal partnership between Japan and ASEAN. Ever since, we have walked together hand-in-hand. During the last year, which marked the 40th anniversary of ASEAN-Japan friendship and cooperation, Prime Minister Abe visited all 10 ASEAN Member States. These visits clearly illustrate that the relationship between ASEAN and Japan has been ever closer and stronger in political and economic areas as well as in the area of cultural and people-to-people exchange. In the ASEAN-Japan Commemorative Summit Meeting held last December, the Vision Statement and its Implementation Plan were adopted, and we confirmed to strengthen ASEAN-Japan cooperation in the fields of “Partners for Peace and Stability”, “Partners for Prosperity”, “Partners for Quality of Life” and “Heart-to-Heart Partners”. I will make sure that there will be steady progress in furthering partnership in these fields.


It is a matter of course that ASEAN is the region of critical importance for Japan. Peace and stability in the region is indispensable for Japan because the vital sea lanes for Japan are located in this region. As a “Proactive Contributor to Peace”, Japan will contribute to peace and stability in the region.


ASEAN is Japan’s second largest trade partner in the world and the largest investment destination in East Asia. ASEAN has the population of more than 600 million, and its remarkable economic growth reached approximately three-fold increase in GDP in the past 10 years. Every year, Japan has been investing in ASEAN region more than double of the volume than that of ten years ago. The number of Japanese people living in this region has almost doubled in the last ten years. Today the production network among the Japanese companies has been established in ASEAN with about 7400 Japanese business entities operating and approximately 150,000 Japanese expatriates living here. In the annual survey to Japanese manufactures inquiring their desirable mid-term investment destinations, more and more ASEAN Member States are receiving higher ranks year by year. In the last year’s survey, nine ASEAN countries are ranked within the top twenty, including Indonesia as the top destination and Thailand as the third.


In the fields of culture and people-to-people exchanges, ASEAN and Japan have been enjoying strong ties. Not only traditional culture such as Sumo wrestling and Wadaiko (Japanese drum) but also Japanese pop culture including animation and fashion are widely popular in ASEAN. Today, more than 13,000 students from ASEAN are studying in Japan and the number will almost double as that of ten years ago. In addition, when large scale tragic natural disasters like earthquake, typhoon, and tsunami occurred, ASEAN and Japan help each other for rescue and reconstruction. In the Great East Japan Earthquake occurred three years ago, ASEAN Member States extended warm support to Japan. When the large scale natural disasters severely hit ASEAN, just like Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines last November, Japan actively offered support both through bilateral channel and through regional and international channels including ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on disaster management (AHA Center).


Aiming at the establishment of ASEAN Community in 2015, ASEAN Member States have been strengthening their cooperation and raising their presence in the international society. The year 2015 is also significant for Japan since it will mark the 70th year after the end of World War II. Japan has been consistently following the path of a democratic and peaceful country. Based on the strong mutual trust nurtured through long-term friendship, Japan, the strategic partner of ASEAN, is expected to proactively support ASEAN’s endeavor to establish ASEAN Community through further collaboration in political, economic, cultural and social areas. I will make my utmost efforts to develop even closer relations and to further promote cooperation here on the front line of ASEAN-Japan diplomatic relations. I wish to have your continuous support and cooperation for this endeavor.


Sincerely,
His Excellency Ambassador Koichi Aiboshi


AmbsAiboshi.jpg
 
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Yup, long term investment is nigh:

Today the production network among the Japanese companies has been established in ASEAN with about 7400 Japanese business entities operating and approximately 150,000 Japanese expatriates living here. In the annual survey to Japanese manufactures inquiring their desirable mid-term investment destinations

Tokyo offers $20bn in aid and loans for ASEAN countries at a celebratory summit to mark 40 years of close ties.
Japan pledges billions in aid to ASEAN region - Asia-Pacific - Al Jazeera English
 
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A 70-year-old Filipino-Japanese man who is facing Philippine immigration problems after he was recognized last March as a Japanese citizen was allowed Wednesday to leave the country for a short trip to Japan.

Bienvenido Toshio Shin's scheduled weeklong trip starting Tuesday to his Japanese father's homeland in Kagoshima Prefecture in southwestern Japan was delayed by a day after the Philippine immigration bureau regarded him as an overstaying foreign national in the Philippines after the Japanese government's issuance to him of a Japanese passport.

Applying existing Philippine immigration regulations on foreign nationals, the bureau estimated Shin, who had no record of entry in the Philippines on his newly issued passport, owes the government almost 1.5 million pesos (around $34,300) in penalties for his "unauthorized" stay in the country during the last 70 years.

Shin, who is a resident of Bukidnon Province in the southern island Mindanao, was born in the neighboring province Davao del Sur to a Filipino woman and a Kagoshima native in April 1944.

His father, identified as Eiji Shin, came to the Philippines before World War II and engaged in charcoal making before getting married.

However, during the war, his father was called into the Japanese Army to serve and was later repatriated to Japan. They never met again.

"I'm very happy that I can finally travel," Shin told Kyodo News at the main airport in Manila before taking his afternoon flight to Tokyo.

He expressed gratitude to the Philippine Nikkei-Jin Legal Support Center, a nonprofit organization that helped him acquire his father's nationality and facilitated his first trip to Japan.

Shin is expected to hold a reunion with his Japanese relatives in Kagoshima, as well as visit his father's grave. He will return next Monday.

Acknowledging the center's repeated request for special consideration on Shin's case, the immigration bureau said in its latest order Wednesday that Shin can be allowed to travel, under certain conditions "given the extraordinary circumstances of this case as well as his colorable legal claim to Filipino citizenship."

The conditions include the deferment of collection of his accrued immigration arrears, his inclusion in the hold departure list, and his inclusion in the blacklist should he fail to return by next Tuesday, among others.

The center's Norihiro Inomata, who escorted Shin at Manila airport, expressed appreciation to the immigration bureau, saying, "I think they all considered him as really a victim of the circumstances of World War II."

"There will be more discussions on this in the bureau, and we will recommend that there should really be a special regulation for cases like that of Mr. Shin because these descendants deserve humanitarian considerations," Inomata told Kyodo News.

He said that if possible, Filipino-Japanese descendants who get Japanese citizenship should not be accused of illegally staying in the Philippines prior to their being officially recognized as such, and they should not be subjected to visa regulations because they still regard the Philippines as their home.

Inomata disclosed that his organization is still attending to at least 26 pending petitions of Filipino-Japanese descendants at the Tokyo Family Court, and around 40 other cases are being planned for filing next year.

Since 2004, the center has helped 129 Filipino-Japanese descendants acquire Japanese citizenship, including Shin.

The center estimates there were around 3,000 second-generation Filipino-Japanese descendants in the Philippines, of whom nearly 900 were not registered with the Japanese government due to unfavorable conditions after the war.

Almost all their Japanese fathers arrived in the Philippines before the war.


Beleaguered Filipino-Japanese gets nod for short trip to Japan | GlobalPost

Son of Imperial Japanese Army soldier visits father's homeland for first time


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AIRA, Kagoshima Prefecture--A Filipino-Japanese man who was separated from his Japanese father because of World War II visited his father’s homeland of Kagoshima Prefecture for the first time on Aug. 7 and went to his father's grave and met relatives.

“My father disappeared due to war, leaving my mother and me--a newborn baby,” Bienvenido Toshio Shin, 70, said at a news conference on Aug. 7. “To me, war means hunger and pain.”

Shin was welcomed by his Japanese relatives in the city of Aira in the prefecture, his father’s hometown and where his grave is located.

Tears ran down Shin’s face as he held an urn of his late father’s ashes at a temple.

“This is a war-related separation,” said Tamao Shin, his 79-year-old cousin who lives in Kagoshima, the prefectural capital. “I hope this kind of tragedy never happens again.”

According to a private support group, Bienvenido’s father, Eiji, came to the Philippines before World War II and was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army during the conflict. He was later repatriated to his home country as a result of Japan’s defeat and the confusion that marked the end of the war, leaving his Filipino wife and Bienvenido behind.

Eiji died in 1975 before the two could be reunited.

Shin acquired Japanese nationality in March.

But his short visit to Japan almost didn’t happen due to immigration problems.

When he was trying to depart from the Philippines, immigration authorities there stopped him because his Japanese citizenship meant he was a foreign national. They accused him of staying illegally in the Philippines for 70 years.

The matter was soon resolved, though, thanks to mediation by the Japanese Embassy in the Philippines and other organizations. The authorities deemed his situation a case requiring "special and extraordinary humanitarian considerations,” approving his departure and re-entry to the country of his birth.



Son of Imperial Japanese Army soldier visits father's homeland for first time - AJW by The Asahi Shimbun
 
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Is he going to settle in Japan now?
 
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Is he going to settle in Japan now?

I think it is best that he stays in Japan. He is a senior citizen and since he is a citizen, he will have access to more resources -- Japan has a lot of opportunities for senior citizens. Since he is Japanese citizen, he can petition his children , grand children who are still in the Philippines -- to have Japanese citizenship. So they can leave Philippines and find better life in Japan.
 
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